FEAT DAILY NEWSLETTER
Sacramento, California http://www.feat.org
December 21, 2001
News Morgue Search www.feat.org/search/news.asp
[By Alan D. Shultz from Chicken Soup for the Kid’s
Soul. From the FEAT Daily Newsletter
archive published two years ago today: December 21, 1999. Rated: two-tissues.]
As Amy Hagadorn rounded the corner across the hall from
her classroom, she collided with a tall boy from the fifth grade running in the
opposite direction.
“Watch it, Squirt,” the boy yelled, as he dodged around
the little third grader. Then, with a smirk on his face, the boy took hold of
his right leg and mimicked the way Amy limped when she walked.
Amy closed her eyes for a moment.
Ignore him, she told herself as she headed for her
classroom.
But at the end of the day, Amy was still thinking
about the tall boy’s
mean teasing. It wasn’t as if he were the only one. It
seemed that ever since Amy started the third grade, someone teased her every
single day. Kids teased her about her speech or her limping. Amy was tired of
it.
Sometimes, even in a classroom full of other students, the
teasing made her feel all alone.
Back home at the dinner table that evening Amy was quiet.
Her mother knew that things were not going well at school. That’s why Patti
Hagadorn was happy to have some exciting news to share with her daughter.
“There’s a Christmas Wish Contest on the radio station,”
Amy’s mom announced. “Write a letter to Santa and you might win a prize. I
think someone at this table with blond curly hair should enter.” Amy giggled.
The contest sounded like fun. She started thinking about what she wanted most for
Christmas.
A smile took hold of Amy when the idea first came to her.
Out came pencil and paper and Amy went to work on her letter. “Dear Santa
Claus,” she began.
While Amy worked away at her best printing, the rest of
the family tried to guess what she might ask from Santa.
Amy’s sister, Jamie, and Amy’s mom both thought a 3-foot
Barbie Doll would top Amy’s wish list. Amy’s dad guessed a picture book. But
Amy wasn’t ready to reveal her secret Christmas wish just then. Here is Amy’s
letter to Santa, just as she wrote it that night:
Dear Santa Claus,
My name is Amy. I am 9 years old. I have a problem at
school. Can you
help me, Santa? Kids laugh at me because of the way I walk
and run and talk. I have cerebral
palsy. I just want one day where no one laughs at me or makes fun of me.
At radio station WJLT in Fort Wayne, Indiana, letters
poured in for the Christmas Wish Contest. The workers had fun reading about all
the different presents that boys and girls from across the city wanted for Christmas.
When Amy’s letter arrived at the radio station, manager
Lee Tobin read it carefully. He knew cerebral palsy was a muscle disorder that
might confuse the schoolmates of Amy who didn’t understand her disability. He thought
it would be good for the people in Fort Wayne to hear about this special third
grader and her unusual wish. Mr. Tobin called up the local newspaper.
The next day, a picture of Amy and her letter to Santa
made the front page of The News Sentinel. The story spread quickly. All across
the country, newspapers and radio and television stations reported the story of
the little girl in Fort Wayne, Indiana, who asked for such a simple, yet remarkable,
Christmas gift—just one day without teasing.
Suddenly the postman was a regular at the Hagadorn house.
Envelopes of all sizes addressed to Amy arrived daily from children and adults
all across the nation. They came filled with holiday greetings and words of encouragement.
During that unforgettable Christmas season, over two
thousand people from all over the world sent Amy letters of friendship and
support. Amy and her family read every single one. Some of the writers had
disabilities; some had been teased as children. Each writer had a special
message for Amy. Through the cards and
letters from strangers, Amy glimpsed a world full of people who truly cared
about each other. She realized that no amount or form of teasing could ever
make her feel lonely again.
Many people thanked Amy for being brave enough to speak
up. Others encouraged her to ignore teasing and to carry her head high. Lynn, a
sixth grader from Texas, sent this message: “I would like to be your friend,”
she wrote, “and if you want to visit me, we could have fun. No one would make fun
of us, cause, if they do, we will not even hear them. “Amy did get her wish of
a special day without teasing at South Wayne Elementary School. Additionally, everyone at school got an
added bonus. Teachers and students talked together about how bad teasing can
make others feel.
That year, the Fort Wayne mayor officially proclaimed
December 21st as Amy Jo Hagadorn Day throughout the city.
The mayor explained that by daring to make such a simple
wish, Amy taught a universal lesson.
“Everyone,” said the mayor, “wants
and deserves to be treated with respect, dignity and warmth.” Copyright 1998 by
Jack Canfield, Mark Victor Hansen, Patty Hansen and Irene Dunlap .
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